Tens of thousands bid farewell to Morgan Tsvangirai

PSG beat Lyon 1-0 to move to top of Ligue 1

Paris Saint-Germain joined Marseille at the top of Ligue 1 on Sunday after beating Lyon 1-0, with a first half injury-time goal by midfielder Blaise Matuidi.

A first half injury-time goal from Blaise Matuidi gave Paris Saint-Germain a 1-0 victory in their top-of-the-table clash with Lyon at the Parc des Princes on Sunday as the capital club moved top on goal difference.

Swedish star Zlatan Ibrahimovic, whose steady supply of goals has constituted the bedrock of PSG's tilt at a first league crown since 1994, this time turned provider, cutting in from the right to whip over a cross for Matuidi, lurking on the edge of the box.

PSG's success before a 43,000 crowd saw them move ahead of both Lyon and Marseille on goal difference with all three having garnered 35 points from 18 games.

Lyon's third defeat of the campaign was a further blow after they had dropped two home points in a midweek draw with rock-bottom Nancy while PSG had been grateful to an Ibrahimovic hat-trick in a 4-0 thrashing of Valenciennes.

And this loss extended their winless sequence against the Parisians to eight encounters.

Lyon gave as good as they got in the early exchanges despite Remi Garde's men missing the midfield creativity of the injured Yoann Gourcuff.

PSG coach Carlo Ancelotti left out Brazilian attacking midfielder Nene, who was dropped for the past two league outings after his attitude to being left on the bench for a Champions League match against Porto came in for criticism - although Ancelotti insisted "his attitude has changed - (but) he has a small calf problem".

The Parisians, floating on a sea of cash from their Qatari owners but still trying to find the right blend in what has been an inconsistent campaign - will now hold on to pole position if they can win their final match of the year on Friday at Brest.

Lyon complete their 2012 programme on Saturday at home to Nice while Marseille finish off the year at the Stade Velodrome against fallen giants Saint Etienne.

Lyon might have easily bagged a point but Argentine striker Lisandro Lopez hit the post.

That was a rare excursion into the danger zone from a visiting side playing five at the back and once PSG had their lead the hosts rarely looked like conceding their advantage.

On Saturday, Andre-Pierre Gignac's first goal since his return from injury guided Marseille to a 1-0 win over nine-man Toulouse after the latter had Cheikh M'Bengue and Franck Tabanou dismissed during the first half.

M'Bengue received a harsh straight red card for a lunge on Morgan Amalfitano on 25 minutes, while Toulouse goalkeeper Ali Ahamada saved a first-half penalty from Andre Ayew after Tabanou had impeded Jordan Ayew.

The home side were then reduced to nine men as Tabanou was sent off for a rash challenge from behind on Andre Ayew on the stroke of half-time, as Ahamada produced a couple of excellent saves from Joey Barton and Lucas Mendes to keep it goalless at the interval.

Saint Etienne saw any real hope of closing in on the top three recede after they went down to a 2-0 home loss to Lorient for whom former Arsenal man Jeremy Aliadiere hit the opener before Alain Traore sealed the win.

Nancy, buoyed by having held Lyon, prevented Bordeaux from moving into the top four by holding them to a 1-1 home draw.